Terry, Mavs keep streaking
Michael Jordan was easy to spot courtside in his bright red coat.
He shook hands, yelled at the referees and kept checking his phone
in his first game as owner-to-be of the Charlotte Bobcats.
Jordan's old magic was missing from his team, however. Be
like Mike? That distinction belonged to the NBA's hottest club.
Dirk Nowitzki had 27 points and 13 rebounds, Jason Terry had
several key buckets down the stretch, and the surging Dallas
Mavericks beat Charlotte 89-84 on Monday night.
If the Bobcats thought Jordan's impending purchase would help
put them over the edge in the playoff race, the Mavericks showed
that Charlotte has plenty of work to do.
"We played scared," Bobcats guard Stephen Jackson said.
Added coach Larry Brown: "I think I did a bad job. I was
looking out there and I didn't know what we were doing."
Jordan's presence and a 4 a.m. arrival in Charlotte couldn't
stop the Mavericks from winning their eighth straight game. Caron
Butler added 22 points and Terry scored 13 of his 20 points in the
fourth quarter for Dallas, which rallied from a 12-point
third-quarter deficit.
"To hold that team to 31 points in the second half really was
the key to our success," Nowitzki said.
Jackson scored 20 points, but also had six of Charlotte's 20
turnovers. Tyrus Thomas added 16 points and 12 rebounds for the
Bobcats, who dropped to 0-12 against the Mavericks, the only team
they've never beaten.
It was a sour end to an eventful day for Jordan, who late
Friday reached a deal to buy the money-losing club from owner Bob
Johnson.
The former NBA superstar, who has rarely attended practices
or games in the past in his role as part-owner and head of
basketball operations, showed up at the morning shootaround and
played two games of H-O-R-S-E with rookie Gerald Henderson - losing
both.
Jordan then sat in his courtside seat next to the Bobcats'
bench, and was already doing some of the handshaking necessary of
an NBA owner even before the league has approved the transaction.
While Jordan declined to speak to reporters, he chatted up
the head of Charlotte's chamber of commerce and the city's former
mayor during a second-quarter timeout. He joked with NASCAR driver
Denny Hamlin and other season-ticket holders on the floor at
halftime.
"Very nice guy. Looking forward to the progress that he will
bring," Hamlin posted on Twitter.
Jordan watched his Bobcats build an early 20-9 lead over the
sluggish Mavericks, who were given no favors by the NBA schedule.
Their home game Sunday night against New Orleans started late
because of television purposes, and Nowitzki said he got to bed
around 5 a.m.
"We were a step slow in the first quarter," Nowitzki said.
"We weren't really quite up yet."
But after falling behind 55-43 in the first minute of the
third quarter, Nowitzki got hot. Hours after being named Western
Conference player of the week, Nowitzki scored 10 points in the
third quarter on a variety of fadeaway and turnaround jumpers,
getting Dallas within 68-66.
Terry then took over in the fourth.
He hit a mid-range jumper, bank shot and 3-pointer in a 13-1
run to put Dallas ahead 83-75 with 4:43 left.
Charlotte got within 85-81 on Jackson's 3-pointer, but Terry
scored on a runner with 1:15 left, and Nowitzki hit two free throws
with 8.8 seconds left to put it away.
"Guys were tired, but it was mental," Terry said. "We had
this situation come up when we played Denver right before the
(All-Star) break. We got in at 4 in the morning and we didn't
handle it well. But this shows signs of maturity."
The Bobcats, who played their fourth straight game without
Nazr Mohammed (back) and their sixth straight without Tyson
Chandler (foot, ankle), managed just nine field goals in the second
half in their fourth loss in five games. They fell into a tie with
idle Miami for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.
"Great things will happen to the franchise," insisted Dallas
coach Rick Carlisle. "I've been around iconic guys like (Larry)
Bird and I've seen what his presence did in Indiana when we first
went there back in '97. Michael will the same things here for
Charlotte."
NOTES: While the Bobcats are looking for backcourt help, GM
Rod Higgins ruled out signing Larry Hughes because his broken
finger will sideline him for several weeks. Higgins said he talked
to Mike James' agent, but called the chances of signing him
"remote." ... The Mavericks were called for four defensive 3-second
violations. ... Brown on Duke product Henderson beating ex-Tar Heel
Jordan in H-O-R-S-E: "I hope that's not an omen for the
Duke-Carolina game. That's my main concern."